Blog
What’s Next
- Refine by Remove filter
- Theme
-
Author
- Mohammed Al-Shawaf
- Ramon Arratia
- Alicia Ayars
- Jennifer Biringer
- Clive Bloom
- Frances Buckingham
- Rob Cameron
- Caroline Chisholm
- Kyra Choucroun
- Cécile Churet
- Lindsay Clinton
- John Elkington
- Tania Ellis
- Jeff Erikson
- Suzanne Fallender
- Paul Gilding
- Chris Guenther
- Alex Hammer
- Andy Hoffman
- Caren Holzman
- Gary Kendall
- Geoff Kendall
- Judy Kuszewski
- Mark Lee
- Simon Lee
- Clarissa Lins
- Geoff Lye
- Heather Mak
- Sam Mountford
- LIz Muller
- Alexander Nick
- Kavita Prakash-Mani
- Jean-Philippe Renaut
- Michael Sadowski
- John Schaetzl
- Preetum Shenoy
- Thomas Singer
- Koann Skrzyniarz
- Rachel Steiman
- Elvira Thissen
- Sophia Tickell
- Luke Upchurch
- Shankar Venkateswaran
- Patrin Watanatada
- Eric Whan
- Kyle Whitaker
- Conor Woodman
- Peter Zollinger
- Date
-

Early talk about the UN Summit Rio+20 to be held June 20-22 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, gives the impression that it may flop. Recent articles from respected groups like the Council on Foreign Relations and the World Resources Institute and outlets like Guardian Sustainable Business and Environmental Finance cite low expectations. For those that pay attention to international governance meetings, the lack of progress at the annual COP meetings (Conference of the Parties) to assess and negotiate climate change commitments and lack of action after past sustainable development meetings have created a cloud of fatigue.
While many are skeptical about Rio+20, we stand to gain from holding this fourth—the fourth in forty years—in a series of Summits focused on environment and development.
-

This year marks two especially significant milestones in sustainable development: the 20th anniversary of the United Nations’ Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and the 25th anniversary of the Brundtland Report, Our Common Future.
How far have we come since the concept of sustainable development was elevated to the global policy agenda?
To put it simply,…
-

SustainAbility and GlobeScan sat down to breakfast in New York recently in the fourth in a series of discussions on “Leadership, Trust and Value.” Over the last few months we’ve held several gatherings about sustainability aspirations with our clients and collaborators in London, DC and San Francisco. At this iteration, colleagues from Cisco, Context America, Goldman Sachs, IFF, Mission Markets, and the Overbrook Foundation joined us. The diversity of our group made our discussion—which volleyed from the evolution of the sustainability movement to “NGO lethargy” and the off-gassing of Styrofoam—all the more interesting.
-

Photo: Flickr user Meena Kadri
A week ago, as I waited at a traffic light in Mumbai, I witnessed an incident of grand theft auto—well, perhaps it was not grand, but something was stolen, and it involved an automobile. Here’s what happened: A barefoot woman in a grubby green sari scurried into the street, carrying a big empty water jug under her arm. Without shame, she went straight to the back of a brightly painted water tanker truck which was waiting for the red light to change. On the back of the water tanker was a large faucet, and when the woman turned the valve, water spurted everywhere, soaking her sari and filling her jug within seconds. The woman’s children and husband watched by the side of the road as she stole the water
-
Lindsay Clinton tracks emerging themes in social enterprise, from this year's Skoll World Forum.
-
Lindsay Clinton is in Mumbai to round off 18 months of research on sustainable solutions to urban poverty.
-
Many companies have struggled to achieve meaningful returns from BOP markets, but they shouldn't give up quite yet.
-
Despite the hope microfinance has not made poverty history - once again we are in need of new inclusive business models.